Acute pancreatitis (AP) is an inflammatory disease of the pancreas and the main cause of hospital admissions for gastrointestinal diseases. Here, the work studied the circular RNA DTNB/microRNA-485-5p/MCL1 axis in AP and hoped to unravel the related mechanism. Caerulein exposure replicated an AP model in AR42J cells, and caerulein-mediated expression of circDTNB, miR-485-5p, and MCL1 was recorded. After exposure, cells were intervened with transfection plasmids and tested for LDH release, apoptosis, and inflammation. To determine the interwork of circDTNB, miR-485-5p, and MCL1, prediction results and verification experiments were conducted. Caerulein exposure reduced circDTNB and MCL1, while elevated miR-485-5p levels in AR42J cells. Upregulating circDTNB protected AR42J cells from caerulein-induced LDH cytotoxicity, apoptosis, and inflammation, but circDTNB upregulation-induced protections could be muffled by inhibiting MCL1. On the contrary, downregulating circDTNB further damaged AR42J cells under caerulein exposure, however, this phenomenon could be partially rescued after silencing miR-485-5p. miR-485-5p was mechanistically verified to be a target of circDTNB to mediate MCL1. Overall, the circDTNB/miR-485-5p/MCL1 axis protects inflammatory response and apoptosis in caerulein-exposed AR42J cells, promisingly identifying circDTNB as a novel molecule for AP treatment.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- pi k akt
- inflammatory response
- signaling pathway
- transcription factor
- poor prognosis
- escherichia coli
- bone marrow
- dendritic cells
- diabetic rats
- immune response
- cell proliferation
- stress induced
- toll like receptor
- combination therapy
- drug induced